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US12410376B2 - Water based semi-synthetic metal working fluid composition containing an alkyl alcohol amine - Google Patents

Water based semi-synthetic metal working fluid composition containing an alkyl alcohol amine

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Publication number
US12410376B2
US12410376B2 US18/723,636 US202218723636A US12410376B2 US 12410376 B2 US12410376 B2 US 12410376B2 US 202218723636 A US202218723636 A US 202218723636A US 12410376 B2 US12410376 B2 US 12410376B2
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Prior art keywords
semi
metal working
working fluid
synthetic metal
synthetic
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US18/723,636
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US20250051676A1 (en
Inventor
Matthew E. Belowich
Qi Jiang
Chao Zhao
Xue Chen
Yong Zhao
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Dow Global Technologies LLC
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Dow Global Technologies LLC
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Assigned to DOW GLOBAL TECHNOLOGIES LLC reassignment DOW GLOBAL TECHNOLOGIES LLC ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: DOW CHEMICAL (CHINA) INVESTMENT COMPANY LIMITED
Assigned to DOW GLOBAL TECHNOLOGIES LLC reassignment DOW GLOBAL TECHNOLOGIES LLC ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: CHEN, Xue, BELOWICH, Matthew E.
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    • C10PETROLEUM, GAS OR COKE INDUSTRIES; TECHNICAL GASES CONTAINING CARBON MONOXIDE; FUELS; LUBRICANTS; PEAT
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    • C10M173/00Lubricating compositions containing more than 10% water
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    • C10M105/00Lubricating compositions characterised by the base-material being a non-macromolecular organic compound
    • C10M105/56Lubricating compositions characterised by the base-material being a non-macromolecular organic compound containing nitrogen
    • C10M105/58Amines, e.g. polyalkylene polyamines, quaternary amines
    • C10M105/60Amines, e.g. polyalkylene polyamines, quaternary amines having amino groups bound to an acyclic or cycloaliphatic carbon atom
    • C10M105/62Amines, e.g. polyalkylene polyamines, quaternary amines having amino groups bound to an acyclic or cycloaliphatic carbon atom containing hydroxy groups
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    • C10M133/00Lubricating compositions characterised by the additive being an organic non-macromolecular compound containing nitrogen
    • C10M133/02Lubricating compositions characterised by the additive being an organic non-macromolecular compound containing nitrogen having a carbon chain of less than 30 atoms
    • C10M133/04Amines, e.g. polyalkylene polyamines; Quaternary amines
    • C10M133/06Amines, e.g. polyalkylene polyamines; Quaternary amines having amino groups bound to acyclic or cycloaliphatic carbon atoms
    • C10M133/08Amines, e.g. polyalkylene polyamines; Quaternary amines having amino groups bound to acyclic or cycloaliphatic carbon atoms containing hydroxy groups
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    • C10M2215/04Amines, e.g. polyalkylene polyamines; Quaternary amines having amino groups bound to acyclic or cycloaliphatic carbon atoms
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    • C10N2030/00Specified physical or chemical properties which is improved by the additive characterising the lubricating composition, e.g. multifunctional additives
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Definitions

  • the current invention relates to a novel class of alkyl alcohol amines where the amine is a primary amine.
  • Embodiments relate to a method of controlling microbial growth in metal working fluids, comprising adding such an alkyl alcohol amine to the metal working fluid.
  • Other embodiments relate to semi-synthetic metal working fluid compositions which include the microbial growth control agent comprising this particular class of alkyl alcohol amines.
  • EMWFs Metal working fluids
  • Amines are a popular MWF component widely used in a variety of applications due to their properties of anti-corrosion, neutralization, and pH adjustment.
  • Organic amines are usually used as corrosion inhibitors because MWFs are degraded over time due to microbial growth which negatively impacts fluid performance and the microbes feed on the active ingredients in the fluid.
  • Such microbial growth in the MWFs may cause serious problems in metalworking processing in many forms including: MWFs general souring, MWFs viscosity changing, MWFs shelf life shortening, and the corroding of tools and materials. Additionally, the functioning of equipment and processes such as feeding nozzles, storage tanks, pipelines and recycling system facilities may also be impacted by microbe growth in MWFs. This souring increases the cost of MWFs, accelerates corrosion rates and decreases efficiency of metal processing. Thus, there is an unfulfilled need in the MWF industry for components which do not support microbial growth and maintain performance over a long time.
  • biocides and amine alcohols either continuously or as a batch treatment to a given MWF.
  • biocides and some secondary amine alcohols are limited by regulatory restrictions and most of the biocide chemicals will release formaldehyde over time which is hazardous to human health.
  • MWFs are typically classified as neat oil, soluble oil, semi-synthetic fluid, or synthetic fluid, with each category exhibiting different functions of cooling, lubricating, anti-rust and cleaning.
  • Soluble oil MWFs comprise 50-70 wt. % neat oil with the remainder of the MWF being anti-wear/extreme pressure additives and emulsifiers.
  • Neat oils and soluble oils typically do not provide the same level of cooling compared with water-based metalworking fluids.
  • Synthetic fluids typically cannot provide the good lubricity performance because their lubricity function is affected by polyalkylene glycol reverse dissolution when the temperature is higher than cloud point.
  • Semi-synthetic materials offer the possibility of simultaneously providing good lubricity and cooling for use in demanding applications.
  • a typical semi-synthetic fluid consists of oils, organic acid, emulsifiers, lubricants, amines, water and other ingredients.
  • the amount of water in such semi-synthetic MWFs is typically up to 50-60 wt. %, with around 10-40 wt. % base oil, around 10-20 wt,% emulsifiers, around 10-20 wt. % amine, and other functional additives such as acid, lubricant, solubilizer, biocide etc.
  • Semi-synthetic MWFs are usually diluted with additional water at an end user's site to a base oil concentration of 1-20 wt. %, more typically 5-7 wt. % concentration by weight of the diluted formulation.
  • emulsifiers are often added to form stable dispersion of oil in water. Emulsifier particles are located around the oil droplets to give them a negative charge that will bind them to the water molecules. The size of such emulsified oil drops is very important to fluid performance, as it is generally easier for the smaller emulsion sizes to penetrate the interface of the cutting zone. The emulsifiers also contribute to the stability of semi-synthetic fluids.
  • MWFs Semi-synthetic fluids will degrade over time in part due to microbial growth which negatively impacts fluid performance because microbes feed on the active ingredients in the fluid.
  • Such microbial growth in the MWFs may cause serious problems in metal working processing in many forms including: MWFs general souring, MWFs viscosity changing, MWFs shelf life shortening, and the corroding of tools and materials.
  • MWFs general souring
  • MWFs viscosity changing MWFs shelf life shortening
  • corroding of tools and materials e.g., the functioning of equipment and processes such as feeding nozzles, storage tanks, pipelines and recycling system facilities may also be impacted by microbe growth in MWFs. This souring increases the cost of MWFs, accelerates corrosion rates and decreases efficiency of metal processing.
  • biocides and amine alcohols either continuously or as a batch treatment to a given MWF.
  • biocides and some secondary amine alcohols are limited by regulatory restrictions and most of the biocide chemicals will release formaldehyde over time which is hazardous to human health.
  • This invention addresses at least some of the above-described needs.
  • the present invention relates to a novel class of alkyl alcohol amines where the amine is a primary amine.
  • the present invention also relates to a method of controlling microbial growth in metal working fluids, wherein the method includes the addition of at least one such alkyl alcohol amine to the metal working fluid.
  • the present invention also describes a water based semi-synthetic metal working fluid comprising a base oil, an organic acid, emulsifiers, a concentrate additive, water and a microbial growth control agent which comprises the novel alkyl alcohol amine.
  • metal working fluids are classified as neat oil, soluble oil, semi-synthetic fluid, or synthetic fluid.
  • Soluble oil MWFs comprise 50-70 wt. % oil with the rest being anti-wear/extreme pressure additives and emulsifiers.
  • Semi-synthetic MWFs contain a significant amount of water, typically up to 50-60 wt. %. Semi-synthetic fluids have balanced lubricity and cooling performance and are thus attractive for use as MWFs.
  • the present invention relates to semi-synthetic metal working fluids, and new materials which can be used as antimicrobials for use in such fluids.
  • the materials of the present invention are alky alcohol amines corresponding to the following formula (I):
  • R 1 and R 2 are H, or a C2 to C8 alkyl group, with the proviso that at least one of R 1 and R 2 is H and at least one of R 1 and R 2 is a C2 to C8 alkyl group.
  • the C2 to C8 alkyl groups may be linear, branched, or cyclic, but linear is generally preferred.
  • alkyl amine alcohol materials can be produced by alkoxylation reaction of ammonia with oxides (such as ethylene oxide, propylene oxide, butylene oxide), as is generally known in the art.
  • oxides such as ethylene oxide, propylene oxide, butylene oxide
  • the MWFs of the present invention comprise water, one or more base oils, one or more organic acids, one or more emulsifiers, one or more lubricants, one or more amines, where amines function as pH adjusters and/or microbial growth control agents, where the at least one amine comprises at least an alkyl amine alcohol of formula (I).
  • the microbial growth control agent may further comprise one or more additional antimicrobial materials such as glycol ether amines which may be used in combination with the above disclosed materials to achieve a certain microbial growth control targets.
  • the concentration of the microbial growth control agent/pH adjuster in the MWF may range front 1, 4, 6, 8, or 10 percent by weight of the formulation up to 30, 25, 15, or 12 percent of the formulation.
  • the alky amine alcohol(s) of formula (I) comprise from 2, preferably 3, or even 5 percent up to 25, preferably 20 or even 15 percent by weight of the MWF.
  • the semi-synthetic MWFs of the present invention also include a base oil.
  • the base oil can be any base oil generally known in the art for use in MWFs.
  • the base oil is a base oil selected from tall oils, naphthenic oils, paraffinic oils or ester oils, or combinations thereof.
  • the concentration of the base oil(s) in the MWF may range from 5, 7, 10, or 15 percent by weight of the formulation up to 50, 45, 40, or 35 percent of the formulation.
  • the water used in the present formulations is preferably deionized water, and may comprise from at least 20, preferably 25, 30, or even 35 percent by weight of the formulation up to a maximum of 70, 65, 60, 55 or even 50 percent by weight of the formulation, it is contemplated that these formulations may be further diluted with additional water prior to use, altering these ranges accordingly.
  • the formulations prior to use, may be diluted such that the base oil concentration is from 1 to 20 percent by weight of the diluted formulation, more typically 5 to 7 percent by weight.
  • the semi-synthetic MWFs of the present invention also include one or more organic acids as solubilizers and/or corrosion inhibitors.
  • Preferred organic acids include 2-ethylhexoic acid, azelaic acid, toll oil fatty acid, 12-hydoxyl-(cis)-9-octadecenoic acid, dicarboxylic acid, and 9-octadecenoic acid.
  • concentration of the organic acid in the MWF may range from 2, 3, 4, or 5 percent by weight of the formulation up to 12, 10, 8, or 7 percent of the formulation.
  • the semi-synthetic MWFs of the present invention also include one or more emulsifiers.
  • the emulsifier may be anionic, cationic or nonionic.
  • suitable anionic surfactants or emulsifiers are alkali metal, ammonium and amine soaps; the fatty acid part of such soaps contains preferably at least 10 carbon atoms.
  • the soaps can also be formed “in situ;” in other words, a fatty acid can be added to the oil phase and an alkaline material to the aqueous phase.
  • Suitable anionic surfactants or emulsifiers are alkali metal salts of alkyl-aryl sulfonic acids, sodium dialkyl sulfosuccinate, sulfated or sulfonated oils, e.g., sulfated castor oil; sulfonated tallow, and alkali salts of short chain petroleum sulfonic acids.
  • Suitable cationic surfactants or emulsifiers are salts of long chain primary, secondary or tertiary amines, such as oleylamide acetate, acetylamine acetate, di-dodecylamine lactate, the acetate of aminoethyl-aminoethyl stearamide, dilauroyl triethylene tetramine diacetate, 1-aminoethyl-2-heptadecenyl imidazoline acetate; and quaternary salts, such as cetylpyridinium bromide, hexadecyl ethyl morpholinium chloride, and diethyl di-dodecyl ammonium chloride.
  • long chain primary, secondary or tertiary amines such as oleylamide acetate, acetylamine acetate, di-dodecylamine lactate, the acetate of aminoethyl-a
  • nonionic surfactants or emulsifiers are condensation products of higher fatty alcohols with ethylene oxide, such as the reaction product of oleyl alcohol with 10 ethylene oxide units; condensation products of alkylphenols with ethylene oxide, such as the reaction product of isoctylphenol with 12 ethylene oxide units; condensation products of higher fatty acid amides with 5, or more, ethylene oxide units; polyethylene glycol esters of long chain fatty acids, such as tetraethylene glycol monopalmitate, hexaethyleneglycol monolaurate, nonaethyleneglycol monostearate, nonaethyleneglycol dioleate, tridecaethyleneglycol monoarachidate, tricosaethyleneglycol monobehenate, tricosaethyleneglycol dibehenate, polyhydric alcohol partial higher fatty acid esters such as sorbitan tristearate, ethylene oxide condensation products of polyhydric alcohol partial higher fatty acid esters, and their inner anhydrides (mannitol-an
  • Particularly suitable emulsifiers include C16-18 alcohols which have been ethoxylated or propoxylated; ethoxylated C12-C15 alcohols; sodium alkane sulfonate and alky ether carboxylates.
  • the concentration of the emulsifier(s) in the MWF may range from 4, 5, 6, 8, or 10 percent by weight of the formulation up to 25, 20, 15, or 12 percent of the formulation.
  • the semi-synthetic MWFs of the present invention may also include one or more concentrate additives.
  • preferred concentrate additives include diethylene glycol butyl ether, ethylene glycol monobutyl ether, and propylene glycol butyl ether.
  • concentration of the concentrate additive(s) in the MWF may range from 0.3, 0.5, 1.0, or 1.5 percent by weight of the formulation up to 2.5, 2.0, or 1.8 percent of the formulation.
  • the semi-synthetic MWFs of the present invention may also include other additives to provide additional functionality as generally known in the art.
  • the microbial growth controlled by the presently disclosed biocide typically consists of contaminations which are a bacterial and fungal mixture.
  • Some typical fungi and bacterial 5 containments include but are not limited to Aeromonas hydrophila (ATCC 13444), Candida albicans (ATCC 752), Desulfovibrio desulfuricans (ATCC 7757), Escherichia coli (ATCC 8739), Flavobacterium ferrugineum (ATCC 13524), Fusarium oxysporum (ATCC 7601), Klebsiella pneumoniae (ATCC 13883), Proteus mirabilis (ATCC 4675), Pseudomonas aeruginosa (ATCC 8689), Pseudomonas oleovorans (ATCC 8062) and Saccharomyces cerevisiae 10 (ATTC 2338).
  • the strains listed above can vary around the world and the present innovation is fully envisioned as broad-spectrum microbial growth
  • Example 1 Monoisobutyanolamine Processing water
  • Example 2 2-Amino-1-butanol/ Processing Monoisobutanolamine water mixture at 30:70 ratio
  • Example 3 Monoisobutyanolamine Tap water
  • Example 4 2-Amino-1-butanol/ Tap water Monoisobutanolamine mixture at 30:70 ratio Comparative Monoisopropanolamine Processing Example 1 water (CE1) Comparative AMP-95 Processing Example 2 water (CE2) Comparative Dicyclohexylamine Processing Example 3 water (CE3) Comparative Monoisopropanolamine Tap water Example 4 (CE4) Comparative AMP-95 Tap water Example 5 (CE5) Comparative Dicyclohexylamine Tap water Example 6 (CE6)
  • Examples and comparative examples are water diluted Concentrated Formulation by 20 times.
  • the concentrated formulations are prepared as follows. The indicated amount of deionised water is poured into a container. Add mineral oil, Ecosurf SA-7 Dowfax 20A42, secondary alkane sulfonate, tall oil acid and diacid (sebacic acid) into the water. Stir the formulation by magnetic stirrer at 200 rpm at 60° C. for 1 hour. Add the indicated amine as pH adjustor.
  • the concentrated formulations are then diluted by processing water or tap water (as indicated in Table, 3) by a factor of 20 times, based on the quantity of the whole concentrated formulation.
  • Test pH value by pH titrator (Mettler Toledo: #SevenMulti). If pH value of the diluted formulation is below 9.5, introduce additional monoethanolamine (1-2 droplets) to increase pH value to at least 9.5.
  • pH aging test test pH value by pH titrator (Mettler Toledo: #SevenMulti) of prepared diluted formulations for 0-day and 14-day. Samples are placed in ambient temperature.
  • IE1 with monoisobutylamine IE3 with 2-amino-1-butanol/monoisobutanolamine mixture
  • CE2 & 3 with AMP-95 and dicyclohexylamine demonstrate similar level in which pH loss is controlled within 5%.
  • CE1 with monoisopropanolamine is not good in that pH loss exceeds 10%.
  • Aluminum corrosion test Clean the Al strips (#ADC12) with alcohol and weigh strips. Immerse the Al strips into the test solution at 40° C. for 48 hours with capped vials (a half volume of Al strip in solution and a half volume of Al strip exposed to air). Observe the corrosion of Al strip surface, measure weight loss of Al strips and use ICP-OES: inductively coupled plasma-optical emission spectrometer (Perkin Elmer: #Optima 5300DV) to detect Al content in formulations.
  • the ICP-OES data shows alignment with qualitative observation of aluminum strip corrosion. Larger area with yellow color demonstrates serious corrosion and higher aluminum content in test fluid.
  • the qualitative description “pass”, “marginal” or “fail” are added to comparatively describe the results observed.
  • IE2 with monoisobutylamine, IE4 with 2-amino-1-butanol/monoisobutanolamine mixture and CE4 with isomonopropanoiamine and CE5 with AMP-95 is good at corrosion resistance with less than 1 ppm aluminum leaching from strip.
  • CE6 is worse than any other sample that more than 2 ppm aluminum content has been leaching into fluid.
  • Antimicrobial test Samples are operated under ASTM E 2275 method. This method can be summarized as follows:
  • the inoculum is a mixture of ATCC strains of bacteria and fungi as set forth in Table 6.
  • the Emulsion Products Mixed Inoculum is prepared by adding 0.1 mL of each bacterial overnight broth culture and 1.0 mL of each yeast broth culture to the 10 mL of mold suspension and blending.
  • the inoculated emulsion samples are monitored for microbial growth by agar plating using a standard streak plate method. Samples are plated on one and seven days after each microbial challenge. Samples are blended by shaking, vortexing, or stirring with a sterile stick or rod. Samples are uniformly streaked onto TSA and PDA plates preferably using standard 10 ⁇ L inoculating loops. The streaked agar plates are incubated at 30° C. (TSA) and 25° C. (PDA) for seven days.
  • TSA 30° C.
  • PDA 25° C.
  • CE4 with isomonopropanolamine fails in all rounds of the testing.
  • CE5 with AMP-95 can pass the test by the end of week but fails upon first contact with microbe in first day of every round test.
  • IE2 with monoisobutylamine, and CE6 with dicyclohexylamine show good antimicrobial performance that can pass every round trial no matter about day-1 or day-7.
  • IE4 with 2-aamino-1-butanol/monoisobutanolamine mixture can also pass 5 round test and show good performance on day-7, but exhibits slightly worse performance on day-1 versus IE2 and CE6.
  • a good amine pH adjustor should pass all of three test items. Thus, monoisobutylamine, 2-amino-1-butanol/monoisobutanolamine mixture, and AMP-95 are qualified, however monoisobutylamine shows the best performance in terms of three testing results.

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Abstract

The current invention relates to a novel class of alkyl alcohol amines where the amine is a primary amine. Embodiments relate to a method of controlling microbial growth in metal working fluids, comprising adding such an alkyl alcohol amine to the metal working fluid. Other embodiments relate to semi-synthetic metal working fluid compositions which include the microbial growth control agent comprising this particular class of alkyl alcohol amines.

Description

This application is a 371 of PCT/CN22/84427, filed Mar. 31, 2022.
The current invention relates to a novel class of alkyl alcohol amines where the amine is a primary amine. Embodiments relate to a method of controlling microbial growth in metal working fluids, comprising adding such an alkyl alcohol amine to the metal working fluid. Other embodiments relate to semi-synthetic metal working fluid compositions which include the microbial growth control agent comprising this particular class of alkyl alcohol amines.
INTRODUCTION
Metal working fluids (EMWFs are used for lubrication of metal cutting and tool forming. These fluids provide cooling for the metal work tooling, removal of cutting chips from the tool/work piece interface and help provide an acceptable post-machining finished surface. Amines are a popular MWF component widely used in a variety of applications due to their properties of anti-corrosion, neutralization, and pH adjustment. Organic amines are usually used as corrosion inhibitors because MWFs are degraded over time due to microbial growth which negatively impacts fluid performance and the microbes feed on the active ingredients in the fluid.
Such microbial growth in the MWFs may cause serious problems in metalworking processing in many forms including: MWFs general souring, MWFs viscosity changing, MWFs shelf life shortening, and the corroding of tools and materials. Additionally, the functioning of equipment and processes such as feeding nozzles, storage tanks, pipelines and recycling system facilities may also be impacted by microbe growth in MWFs. This souring increases the cost of MWFs, accelerates corrosion rates and decreases efficiency of metal processing. Thus, there is an unfulfilled need in the MWF industry for components which do not support microbial growth and maintain performance over a long time.
Thus, there is an unfulfilled need in the MWF industry for components which do not support microbial growth and maintain performance over a long time. The most common solution is to add biocides and amine alcohols either continuously or as a batch treatment to a given MWF. However, biocides and some secondary amine alcohols are limited by regulatory restrictions and most of the biocide chemicals will release formaldehyde over time which is hazardous to human health.
Existing MWFs are typically classified as neat oil, soluble oil, semi-synthetic fluid, or synthetic fluid, with each category exhibiting different functions of cooling, lubricating, anti-rust and cleaning. Soluble oil MWFs comprise 50-70 wt. % neat oil with the remainder of the MWF being anti-wear/extreme pressure additives and emulsifiers. Neat oils and soluble oils typically do not provide the same level of cooling compared with water-based metalworking fluids. Synthetic fluids typically cannot provide the good lubricity performance because their lubricity function is affected by polyalkylene glycol reverse dissolution when the temperature is higher than cloud point. Semi-synthetic materials offer the possibility of simultaneously providing good lubricity and cooling for use in demanding applications. A typical semi-synthetic fluid consists of oils, organic acid, emulsifiers, lubricants, amines, water and other ingredients. The amount of water in such semi-synthetic MWFs is typically up to 50-60 wt. %, with around 10-40 wt. % base oil, around 10-20 wt,% emulsifiers, around 10-20 wt. % amine, and other functional additives such as acid, lubricant, solubilizer, biocide etc. Semi-synthetic MWFs are usually diluted with additional water at an end user's site to a base oil concentration of 1-20 wt. %, more typically 5-7 wt. % concentration by weight of the diluted formulation.
In semi-synthetic fluids, emulsifiers are often added to form stable dispersion of oil in water. Emulsifier particles are located around the oil droplets to give them a negative charge that will bind them to the water molecules. The size of such emulsified oil drops is very important to fluid performance, as it is generally easier for the smaller emulsion sizes to penetrate the interface of the cutting zone. The emulsifiers also contribute to the stability of semi-synthetic fluids.
Semi-synthetic fluids will degrade over time in part due to microbial growth which negatively impacts fluid performance because microbes feed on the active ingredients in the fluid. Such microbial growth in the MWFs may cause serious problems in metal working processing in many forms including: MWFs general souring, MWFs viscosity changing, MWFs shelf life shortening, and the corroding of tools and materials. Additionally, the functioning of equipment and processes such as feeding nozzles, storage tanks, pipelines and recycling system facilities may also be impacted by microbe growth in MWFs. This souring increases the cost of MWFs, accelerates corrosion rates and decreases efficiency of metal processing. The most common solution to control microbial growth is to add biocides and amine alcohols either continuously or as a batch treatment to a given MWF. However, biocides and some secondary amine alcohols are limited by regulatory restrictions and most of the biocide chemicals will release formaldehyde over time which is hazardous to human health.
It is therefore desired to have new semi-synthetic metal working formulations with new biocidal compositions which provide improved cooling, lubricity, concentrate stability, and long shelf life, without the environmental health and safety concerns of present fluids.
This invention addresses at least some of the above-described needs.
SUMMARY
The present invention relates to a novel class of alkyl alcohol amines where the amine is a primary amine. The present invention also relates to a method of controlling microbial growth in metal working fluids, wherein the method includes the addition of at least one such alkyl alcohol amine to the metal working fluid. The present invention also describes a water based semi-synthetic metal working fluid comprising a base oil, an organic acid, emulsifiers, a concentrate additive, water and a microbial growth control agent which comprises the novel alkyl alcohol amine.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
Depending on their composition, metal working fluids are classified as neat oil, soluble oil, semi-synthetic fluid, or synthetic fluid. Soluble oil MWFs comprise 50-70 wt. % oil with the rest being anti-wear/extreme pressure additives and emulsifiers. Semi-synthetic MWFs contain a significant amount of water, typically up to 50-60 wt. %. Semi-synthetic fluids have balanced lubricity and cooling performance and are thus attractive for use as MWFs.
The present invention relates to semi-synthetic metal working fluids, and new materials which can be used as antimicrobials for use in such fluids. The materials of the present invention are alky alcohol amines corresponding to the following formula (I):
Figure US12410376-20250909-C00001

where R1 and R2 are H, or a C2 to C8 alkyl group, with the proviso that at least one of R1 and R2 is H and at least one of R1 and R2 is a C2 to C8 alkyl group. The C2 to C8 alkyl groups may be linear, branched, or cyclic, but linear is generally preferred.
Such alkyl amine alcohol materials can be produced by alkoxylation reaction of ammonia with oxides (such as ethylene oxide, propylene oxide, butylene oxide), as is generally known in the art.
The MWFs of the present invention comprise water, one or more base oils, one or more organic acids, one or more emulsifiers, one or more lubricants, one or more amines, where amines function as pH adjusters and/or microbial growth control agents, where the at least one amine comprises at least an alkyl amine alcohol of formula (I).
The microbial growth control agent may further comprise one or more additional antimicrobial materials such as glycol ether amines which may be used in combination with the above disclosed materials to achieve a certain microbial growth control targets. The concentration of the microbial growth control agent/pH adjuster in the MWF (including the alkyl amine alcohols of formula (I) may range front 1, 4, 6, 8, or 10 percent by weight of the formulation up to 30, 25, 15, or 12 percent of the formulation. Preferably the alky amine alcohol(s) of formula (I) comprise from 2, preferably 3, or even 5 percent up to 25, preferably 20 or even 15 percent by weight of the MWF.
The semi-synthetic MWFs of the present invention also include a base oil. The base oil can be any base oil generally known in the art for use in MWFs. Preferably the base oil is a base oil selected from tall oils, naphthenic oils, paraffinic oils or ester oils, or combinations thereof. The concentration of the base oil(s) in the MWF may range from 5, 7, 10, or 15 percent by weight of the formulation up to 50, 45, 40, or 35 percent of the formulation.
The water used in the present formulations is preferably deionized water, and may comprise from at least 20, preferably 25, 30, or even 35 percent by weight of the formulation up to a maximum of 70, 65, 60, 55 or even 50 percent by weight of the formulation, it is contemplated that these formulations may be further diluted with additional water prior to use, altering these ranges accordingly. For example, prior to use, the formulations may be diluted such that the base oil concentration is from 1 to 20 percent by weight of the diluted formulation, more typically 5 to 7 percent by weight.
The semi-synthetic MWFs of the present invention also include one or more organic acids as solubilizers and/or corrosion inhibitors. Preferred organic acids include 2-ethylhexoic acid, azelaic acid, toll oil fatty acid, 12-hydoxyl-(cis)-9-octadecenoic acid, dicarboxylic acid, and 9-octadecenoic acid. The concentration of the organic acid in the MWF may range from 2, 3, 4, or 5 percent by weight of the formulation up to 12, 10, 8, or 7 percent of the formulation.
The semi-synthetic MWFs of the present invention also include one or more emulsifiers. The emulsifier may be anionic, cationic or nonionic. Examples of suitable anionic surfactants or emulsifiers are alkali metal, ammonium and amine soaps; the fatty acid part of such soaps contains preferably at least 10 carbon atoms. The soaps can also be formed “in situ;” in other words, a fatty acid can be added to the oil phase and an alkaline material to the aqueous phase.
Other examples of suitable anionic surfactants or emulsifiers are alkali metal salts of alkyl-aryl sulfonic acids, sodium dialkyl sulfosuccinate, sulfated or sulfonated oils, e.g., sulfated castor oil; sulfonated tallow, and alkali salts of short chain petroleum sulfonic acids.
Suitable cationic surfactants or emulsifiers are salts of long chain primary, secondary or tertiary amines, such as oleylamide acetate, acetylamine acetate, di-dodecylamine lactate, the acetate of aminoethyl-aminoethyl stearamide, dilauroyl triethylene tetramine diacetate, 1-aminoethyl-2-heptadecenyl imidazoline acetate; and quaternary salts, such as cetylpyridinium bromide, hexadecyl ethyl morpholinium chloride, and diethyl di-dodecyl ammonium chloride.
Examples of suitable nonionic surfactants or emulsifiers are condensation products of higher fatty alcohols with ethylene oxide, such as the reaction product of oleyl alcohol with 10 ethylene oxide units; condensation products of alkylphenols with ethylene oxide, such as the reaction product of isoctylphenol with 12 ethylene oxide units; condensation products of higher fatty acid amides with 5, or more, ethylene oxide units; polyethylene glycol esters of long chain fatty acids, such as tetraethylene glycol monopalmitate, hexaethyleneglycol monolaurate, nonaethyleneglycol monostearate, nonaethyleneglycol dioleate, tridecaethyleneglycol monoarachidate, tricosaethyleneglycol monobehenate, tricosaethyleneglycol dibehenate, polyhydric alcohol partial higher fatty acid esters such as sorbitan tristearate, ethylene oxide condensation products of polyhydric alcohol partial higher fatty acid esters, and their inner anhydrides (mannitol-anhydride, called Mannitan, and sorbitol-anhydride, called Sorbitan), such as glycerol monopalmitate reacted with 10 molecules of ethylene oxide, pentaerythritol monoleate reacted with 12 molecules of ethylene oxide, sorbitan monostearate reacted with 10-15 molecules of ethylene oxide, mannitan monopalmitate reacted with 10-15 molecules of ethylene oxide; long chain polyglycols in which one hydroxyl group is esterified with a higher fatty acid and other hydroxyl group is etherified with a low molecular alcohol, such as methoxypolyethylene glycol 550 monostearate (550 meaning the average molecular weight of the polyglycol ether). A combination of two or more of these surfactants may be used; e.g., a cationic may be blended with a nonionic or an anionic with a nonionic.
Particularly suitable emulsifiers include C16-18 alcohols which have been ethoxylated or propoxylated; ethoxylated C12-C15 alcohols; sodium alkane sulfonate and alky ether carboxylates.
The concentration of the emulsifier(s) in the MWF may range from 4, 5, 6, 8, or 10 percent by weight of the formulation up to 25, 20, 15, or 12 percent of the formulation.
The semi-synthetic MWFs of the present invention may also include one or more concentrate additives. If present, preferred concentrate additives include diethylene glycol butyl ether, ethylene glycol monobutyl ether, and propylene glycol butyl ether. If present, the concentration of the concentrate additive(s) in the MWF may range from 0.3, 0.5, 1.0, or 1.5 percent by weight of the formulation up to 2.5, 2.0, or 1.8 percent of the formulation.
The semi-synthetic MWFs of the present invention may also include other additives to provide additional functionality as generally known in the art.
The microbial growth controlled by the presently disclosed biocide typically consists of contaminations which are a bacterial and fungal mixture. Some typical fungi and bacterial 5 containments include but are not limited to Aeromonas hydrophila (ATCC 13444), Candida albicans (ATCC 752), Desulfovibrio desulfuricans (ATCC 7757), Escherichia coli (ATCC 8739), Flavobacterium ferrugineum (ATCC 13524), Fusarium oxysporum (ATCC 7601), Klebsiella pneumoniae (ATCC 13883), Proteus mirabilis (ATCC 4675), Pseudomonas aeruginosa (ATCC 8689), Pseudomonas oleovorans (ATCC 8062) and Saccharomyces cerevisiae 10 (ATTC 2338). The strains listed above can vary around the world and the present innovation is fully envisioned as broad-spectrum microbial growth control agent and/or biocide which can be used against any common MWF microbial contaminates.
EXAMPLES
Experiments to test the efficacy of formulations including the presently disclosed microbial growth control agent can be conducted as follows. Table 1 contains a description of the materials used in these examples.
TABLE 1
Diluted Metalworking Fluid Ingredients
Material Type Source
Mineral oil Oily agent SCRC
EcoSurf SA-7 Emulsifer Dow
Dowfax 20A42 Emulsifer Dow
Secondary alkane Anionic surfactant SCRC
sulphonate
Tall oil acid Corrosion agent SCRC
Sebacic acid Corrosion agent SCRC
Monoisobutanolamine pH adjustor Dow
2-Amino-1-butanol/ pH adjustor Dow
Monoisobutanolamine
mixture
Monoethanolamine pH adjustor Dow
Monoisopropanolamine pH adjustor Dow
AMP-95 (2-amino-2- pH adjustor Angus Chem
methyl-1-propanol)
Processing Water Water containing common N/A
bacterial agents found in
metal working processes
Tap Water Water containing 50 ppm N/A
metal
Aluminum strip Metal TCI
(#ADC12)
1,2-epoxybutane Starting material for Sigma-Aldrich
(CAS: 106-88-7) synthesis
28% Aqueous ammonium Solvent & starting Sigma-Aldrich
hydroxide material for synthesis
(CAS: 1336-21-6)

A series of formulations is prepared according to Table 2, with the different amines listed in Table 3.
TABLE 2
Material Concentrated Formulation
Mineral oil 12.5 wt. %
EcoSurf SA-7 7.5 wt. %
Dowfax 20A42 5.5 wt. %
Secondary alkane 4.5 wt. %
sulphonate
Tall oil acid 4.5 wt. %
Sebacic acid 4.5 wt. %
Amine (as indicated 10.7 wt. %
in Table 3)
Water 50.3 wt. %
TABLE 3
Diluted water
Item Amine type type
Example 1 (IE1) Monoisobutyanolamine Processing
water
Example 2 (IE2) 2-Amino-1-butanol/ Processing
Monoisobutanolamine water
mixture at 30:70 ratio
Example 3 (IE3) Monoisobutyanolamine Tap water
Example 4 (IE4) 2-Amino-1-butanol/ Tap water
Monoisobutanolamine
mixture at 30:70 ratio
Comparative Monoisopropanolamine Processing
Example 1 water
(CE1)
Comparative AMP-95 Processing
Example 2 water
(CE2)
Comparative Dicyclohexylamine Processing
Example 3 water
(CE3)
Comparative Monoisopropanolamine Tap water
Example 4
(CE4)
Comparative AMP-95 Tap water
Example 5
(CE5)
Comparative Dicyclohexylamine Tap water
Example 6
(CE6)
Examples and comparative examples are water diluted Concentrated Formulation by 20 times.
The concentrated formulations are prepared as follows. The indicated amount of deionised water is poured into a container. Add mineral oil, Ecosurf SA-7 Dowfax 20A42, secondary alkane sulfonate, tall oil acid and diacid (sebacic acid) into the water. Stir the formulation by magnetic stirrer at 200 rpm at 60° C. for 1 hour. Add the indicated amine as pH adjustor.
The concentrated formulations are then diluted by processing water or tap water (as indicated in Table, 3) by a factor of 20 times, based on the quantity of the whole concentrated formulation. Test pH value by pH titrator (Mettler Toledo: #SevenMulti). If pH value of the diluted formulation is below 9.5, introduce additional monoethanolamine (1-2 droplets) to increase pH value to at least 9.5.
pH aging test: test pH value by pH titrator (Mettler Toledo: #SevenMulti) of prepared diluted formulations for 0-day and 14-day. Samples are placed in ambient temperature.
TABLE 4
pH aging test:
Initial pH 1-week aging 2-week aging pH loss
Sample # value pH value pH value (%)
IE1 9.67 9.43 9.43 −2.5%
IE2 9.52 9.31 9.31 −2.2%
CE1 9.55 8.72 8.52 −10.8%
CE2 9.54 9.29 9.29 −2.6%
CE3 9.63 9.33 9.30 −3.4%
The pH decrement after 2-week aging should be as small as possible, IE1 with monoisobutylamine, IE3 with 2-amino-1-butanol/monoisobutanolamine mixture and CE2 & 3 with AMP-95 and dicyclohexylamine demonstrate similar level in which pH loss is controlled within 5%. CE1 with monoisopropanolamine is not good in that pH loss exceeds 10%.
Aluminum corrosion test: Clean the Al strips (#ADC12) with alcohol and weigh strips. Immerse the Al strips into the test solution at 40° C. for 48 hours with capped vials (a half volume of Al strip in solution and a half volume of Al strip exposed to air). Observe the corrosion of Al strip surface, measure weight loss of Al strips and use ICP-OES: inductively coupled plasma-optical emission spectrometer (Perkin Elmer: #Optima 5300DV) to detect Al content in formulations.
TABLE 5
Aluminum corrosion test:
Aluminum content
Sample # Corrosion by ICP-OES
IE2
Figure US12410376-20250909-P00001
 pass
0.53 ppm
IE4
Figure US12410376-20250909-P00002
 pass
0.39 ppm
CE4
Figure US12410376-20250909-P00003
 pass
0.11 ppm
CE5
Figure US12410376-20250909-P00004
 marginal
0.42 ppm
CE6
Figure US12410376-20250909-P00005
 fail
2.60 ppm
The ICP-OES data shows alignment with qualitative observation of aluminum strip corrosion. Larger area with yellow color demonstrates serious corrosion and higher aluminum content in test fluid. The qualitative description “pass”, “marginal” or “fail” are added to comparatively describe the results observed. IE2 with monoisobutylamine, IE4 with 2-amino-1-butanol/monoisobutanolamine mixture and CE4 with isomonopropanoiamine and CE5 with AMP-95 is good at corrosion resistance with less than 1 ppm aluminum leaching from strip. CE6 is worse than any other sample that more than 2 ppm aluminum content has been leaching into fluid.
Antimicrobial test: Samples are operated under ASTM E 2275 method. This method can be summarized as follows:
The inoculum is a mixture of ATCC strains of bacteria and fungi as set forth in Table 6. The Emulsion Products Mixed Inoculum is prepared by adding 0.1 mL of each bacterial overnight broth culture and 1.0 mL of each yeast broth culture to the 10 mL of mold suspension and blending.
50 grams of sample are dosed with 0.5 ml of the mixed inoculum. This inoculation will challenge emulsion samples with a high level (106-107 Colony Forming Units per gram of sample. CFU/g) of microorganisms, Challenged samples are mixed and stored in the incubator at 30° C. for seven days. This process is repeated for 5 additional rounds of testing with the following amounts of inoculum being added to each sample: 2nd round 0.5 mL; 3rd round 1.0 mL; 4th round 1.0 mL; 5th round 3.0 mL.
The inoculated emulsion samples are monitored for microbial growth by agar plating using a standard streak plate method. Samples are plated on one and seven days after each microbial challenge. Samples are blended by shaking, vortexing, or stirring with a sterile stick or rod. Samples are uniformly streaked onto TSA and PDA plates preferably using standard 10 μL inoculating loops. The streaked agar plates are incubated at 30° C. (TSA) and 25° C. (PDA) for seven days.
All of the agar plates are checked seven days after plating to determine the number of microorganisms surviving in the test samples. For the plates streaked 7 days post inoculation, no colony growth will be considered a PASS.
TABLE 6
Microorganisms ATCC #
Bacteria:
Pseudomonas aeruginosa 10145
Pseudomonas putida 12633
Enterobacter aerogenes 13048
Alcaligenes faecalis 25094
Proteus hauseri 13315
Burkholderia cepacia 21809
Gluconacetobacter 14835
liquefaciens(Asai)
Gluconacetobacter 23751
liquefaciens
Yeast:
Saccharomyces cerivisae 2338
Candida lipolytica 18942
Mold:
Aspergillus niger 6275
Penicillium ludwigii 9112
TABLE 7
Antimicrobial test:
Sample Day-1, Day-7, Day-1, Day-7, Day-1, Day-7, Day-1, Day-7, Day-1, Day-7,
# Week-1 Week-1 Week-2 Week-2 Week-3 Week-3 Week-4 Week-4 Week-5 Week-5
IE2 Pass Pass Pass Pass Pass Pass Pass Pass Pass Pass
IE4 Marg Pass Marg Pass Marg Pass Marg Pass Marg Pass
CE4 Fail Fail Fail Fail Fail Fail Fail Fail Fail Fail
CE5 Fail Pass Fail Pass Fail Pass Fail Pass Fail Pass
CE6 Pass Pass Pass Pass Pass Pass Pass Pass Pass Pass
Pass = no colony growth
Marg = Marginal = marginal colony growth
Fail = significant colony growth
CE4 with isomonopropanolamine fails in all rounds of the testing. CE5 with AMP-95 can pass the test by the end of week but fails upon first contact with microbe in first day of every round test. IE2 with monoisobutylamine, and CE6 with dicyclohexylamine show good antimicrobial performance that can pass every round trial no matter about day-1 or day-7. IE4 with 2-aamino-1-butanol/monoisobutanolamine mixture can also pass 5 round test and show good performance on day-7, but exhibits slightly worse performance on day-1 versus IE2 and CE6.
A good amine pH adjustor should pass all of three test items. Thus, monoisobutylamine, 2-amino-1-butanol/monoisobutanolamine mixture, and AMP-95 are qualified, however monoisobutylamine shows the best performance in terms of three testing results.

Claims (12)

The invention claimed is:
1. A semi-synthetic metal working fluid, comprising:
a. at least one base oil;
b. at least one microbial growth control agent comprising monoisobutanolamine;
c. one or more organic acid;
d. one or more emulsifiers;
e. one or more concentrate additives; and
f. water.
2. The semi-synthetic metal working fluid of claim 1, wherein the microbial growth control agent further comprises another amine.
3. The semi-synthetic metal working fluid of claim 1, wherein the base oil is selected from naphthenic oils, paraffinic oils, ester oils and mixtures thereof.
4. The semi-synthetic metal working fluid of claim 1, wherein the emulsifier is selected from C16-18 alcohols which have been ethoxylated or propoxylated, ethoxylated C12-C15 alcohols, sodium alkane sulfonate and alky ether carboxylates and mixtures thereof.
5. The semi-synthetic metal working fluid of claim 1, wherein the organic acid is selected from ethylhexoic acid, azelaic acid, tall oil fatty acid, 12-hydoxyl-(cis)-9-octadecenoic acid, 9-octadecenoic acid, sebacic acid, and mixtures thereof.
6. The semi-synthetic metal working fluid of claim 1, wherein the microbial growth control agent is present in an amount of from 6 to 15 percent by weight of the semi-synthetic metal working fluid.
7. The semi-synthetic metal working fluid of claim 1, wherein the base oil is present in an amount of from 10 to 45 percent by weight of the semi-synthetic metal working fluid.
8. The semi-synthetic metal working fluid of claim 1, wherein the emulsifier is present in an amount of from 5 to 20 percent by weight of the semi-synthetic metal working fluid.
9. The semi-synthetic metal working fluid of claim 1, wherein the organic acid is present in an amount of from 3 to 10 percent by weight of the semi-synthetic metal working fluid.
10. The semi-synthetic metal working fluid of claim 1, wherein the water is present in an amount of from 20 to 60 percent by weight of the semi-synthetic metal working fluid.
11. The semi-synthetic metal working fluid of claim 2 wherein the additional amine comprises 2-amino-1-butanol.
12. The semi-synthetic metal working fluid of claim 1 wherein the concentrate additive is selected from the group consisting of diethylene glycol butyl ether, ethylene glycol monobutyl ether, and propylene glycol butyl ether.
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